Partly Cloudy

Bulawayo

21°C

Partly Cloudy

Poor being hit by crisis says IMF

IMFThe world's poorest countries are beginning to be hit by the global financial crisis, warns the International Monetary Fund (IMF). And they are likely to need $25bn (£18bn) in additional financing this year, the organisation says.

The IMF describes it as the "third wave" of the downturn; after first affecting the advanced and then the emerging economies.

And it is calling on donor countries not to cut back on their support.

In a new report, the IMF says poor countries face greater exposure to the current crisis because they are more integrated into the international economy than they used to be.

They are likely to feel the impact through a downturn in trade and falls in foreign investment and remittances - money sent home by people working abroad, the fund adds.
{mosgoogle}

Humanitarian crisis

The report says more than 20 countries, half of them in Sub-Saharan Africa, are particularly vulnerable.

It warns that if "global growth and financing conditions deteriorate further, the number of vulnerable countries could almost double".

And that would increase the additional amount of money countries need towards $140bn, the study predicts.

"After hitting first the advanced economies and then the emerging economies, a third wave from the global financial crisis is now hitting the world's poorest and most vulnerable countries," the head of the IMF, Dominique Strauss-Kahn, says.

"This puts at risk the major achievements of higher growth, lower poverty, and greater political stability that many low-income countries have made over the past decade."

Mr Strauss-Kahn called on donor nations to provide the financing required in order to "prevent a humanitarian crisis".

The IMF, which represents 185 nations, says it has already increased its support to low income countries in the last year and it is ready to provide more.

But the amount is still relatively low, our economics correspondent Andrew Walker says.

And the IMF has made larger commitments to mainly middle income countries that are more directly affected by the financial crisis, our correspondent adds. - BBC.
Comments (0)Add Comment

Write comment
quote
bold
italicize
underline
strike
url
image
quote
quote
smile
wink
laugh
grin
angry
sad
shocked
cool
tongue
kiss
cry
smaller | bigger

security code
Write the displayed characters


busy

Comments

  • Latest
  • Most
Zapu congress endorses Dabengwa
Edgar, please be man enough and form your new party before you try and call the liberation movement ...
Leadership Indaba delivers strategies for Matabeleland
smileythanks for everything you are doing i just found about this online topics and discussions about h...
Zimbabwe govt bans showing of Owen Maseko's paintings
The guilty are afraid. The very guilty are VERY afraid. Qhude manikiniki.
Zapu congress endorses Dabengwa
DD has shown that he is brave, at least for someone of his age. let us instead of painting a bad pic...
  • Login
  • stocks
  • Radio
Loading
Chart
o Microsoft 23.85 ▼0.16 (-0.67%)
o Google 477.74 ▲1.56 (0.33%)
o BRE 41.41 ▲0.01 (0.02%)
o Yahoo 13.70 ▲0.05 (0.36%)
NASDAQ:MSFT

Microsoft

Company ID [NASDAQ:MSFT] Last trade:23.85 Trade time:2:44PM EDT Value change:▼0.16 (-0.67%)
NASDAQ:GOOG

Google

Company ID [NASDAQ:GOOG] Last trade:477.74 Trade time:2:44PM EDT Value change:▲1.56 (0.33%)
NYSE:BRE

BRE

Company ID [NYSE:BRE] Last trade:41.41 Trade time:2:43PM EDT Value change:▲0.01 (0.02%)
NASDAQ:YHOO

Yahoo

Company ID [NASDAQ:YHOO] Last trade:13.70 Trade time:2:44PM EDT Value change:▲0.05 (0.36%)
..click on one of the icons below to listen to Radio Mthwakazi

listen with Window Media Player   listen with Winamp   listen with iTunes   listen with RealPlayer

Currently Playing: Dj Dumile - Track 7